Monday, October 11, 2010

Kicking Your Monday Off On A Mellow Note

A well-worn cliche in music is that what's not said or heard in a song can be as important as what's heard. A textbook version of this is Dylan's "Most of the Time."

I initially heard this one from one of the scores of Dylan "bootleg" releases (the excellent bootleg series that included his Oh Mercy/Time Out of Mind/Love and Theft period). But the song was familiar enough for some reason, and it was only after a bit of research that I discovered it was featured in a pivotal scene in High Fidelity, a movie that all music geeks should have in their collection.

Pay no mind to the slightly glossy video and production. The song itself is among Dylan's best, and unfortunately buried in one of his lesser albums (Oh Mercy). It's pure late-era Dylan. A woman wronged him. And you're hearing the voice of a man with a scarred heart.

Of course, according to the song, things are going OK.

"Most of the time I'm clear and focused all around
Most of the time I can keep both feet on the ground"

His resilience continues....

"I can handle I stumble upon / I don't even notice she gone
Most of the time"

Of course, the key is "most of the time."
His bitterness grows, but never in a wallowing self-pity tone. He even goes as far as to not give her a name.

"I can survive and I can endure
And I don't even think about her
Most of the time"

The "most of the time" is the stuff that tears you up. It's the reason Dylan spent a bit more time emphasizing "her" - adding a slight growl at the end. For true effect, go to the original recording from "Oh Mercy" - and let the final atmospherics by Daniel Lanois engulf you.








Thursday, October 7, 2010

SOL Returning Monday due to burnout

As you probably have guessed, we haven't been doing the best in getting stuff pushed daily. Scott has a wicked cold. I've had three articles due....tonight - and a hellishly brutal workweek. So SOL will be taking a hiatus this week due to burnout.

But I feel bad not giving readers something, so in the spirit of the reason for the brief hiatus...

Monday, October 4, 2010

Sometimes The Bad Guys Win - NSFW

This past week was a test. Work had me there until 7 at night. Then a few hours of take-home work. Meaning I left my dog at home to fend for himself and...hold it - for a full 11 hours. I had deadlines at my newspaper I freelance for - and I couldn't get near the progress I wanted on two stories I was writing. If stress can make you sick, I was living proof on Thursday, Friday and Saturday.

Then I heard about the senseless tragedy at Rutgers where a student took his life after an intimate moment was filmed without his knowledge - and then posted to the Internet. A combination of sleep deprivation and stress has a way of scrubbing your nerves saw, leaving you exposed to the slightest negativity. And in this situation, I went for my "go to" song, Jarvis Cocker's "Running the World."

The song was written in response to the relative lack of interest/impact of Live 8. The song's striking cynicism was enough to make Blur's Damon Albarn to publicly chastise Cocker for the song. But I defy Damon to answer whether or not he's ever felt what Cocker was singing about. Over a simple, mournful piano chord, Jarvis keeps the drama to a minimum, going with a plainspoken delivery:

"Well did you hear, there’s a natural order.
Those most deserving will end up with the most.
That the cream cannot help but always rise up to the top,
Well I say: Shit floats."

He then surveys the damage of a worldwide economic crash (a year before it actually happened even!). If these were spoken by any other angst-ridden singer or even co-worker or associate, you may tire of its perpetual bleak outlook, but Cocker manages to give it a weary elegance.

"Now the working classes are obsolete,
They are surplus to societies needs,
So let ‘em all kill each other,
And get it made overseas."

The final verse is almost a rip-off of The Clash's "Know Your Rights" where Joe Strummer said "You have a right to free speech - as long as you're not dumb enough to actually try it". Cocker's version:

"And if you don’t like it? Then leave.
Or use your right to protest on the street,
Yeah, use your rights but don’t imagine that it’s heard, Oh no no"

The vulgar chorus is the shock value, but honestly, the song is so well structured, I would have been fine with Cocker singing "Jerks are still running the world." Just what he said was a bit more effective. And I praise him for having the stones to release a song as beautifully bleak as this.


Speaking of beautifully bleak, the song plays in the credits of one of the best films of the last decade, Children of Men. If you haven't tracked it down yet, by all means do so. Your future college-aged sophomore geeks will be obsessing over this movie just as geeks today obsess over Blade Runner.